Here’s a frothy brew you wouldn’t want to put a
straw into: a not-so-tasty blend of sewage and garbage. As unappealing
as it may seem together the two can cut greenhouse gases, help cleanup
water supplies and add a new source of green and endlessly renewable
fuel, all with the help of a new patented invention by Viridis Waste
Control: Septage Bioreactor Landfill (TM) technology.

Left
on their own to decay, both waste pumped from septic systems (known as
septage) and garbage in solid waste landfills produce methane gas (a
powerful greenhouse gas in itself) and carbon dioxide, the most
popularized greenhouse gas. But the decaying process, particularly for
garbage, is slow. It takes a considerable time for garbage in landfill
operations to decompose enough to make significant amounts of gases.
(It’s the huge volume - the acreage and depth - of landfill operations
that allow them to be tapped for large, usable amounts of methane.)

But
blending sewage with garbage accelerates the breakdown of the garbage.
The result is steady supply of methane that can be used directly as
fuel or mixed with natural gas for pipeline distribution. (Natural gas
is mostly methane. The mix is relatively easy.)

There are more significant advantages blending the garbage and septage together and quickly reacting them into fuel:

---
Protect ground and surface water. The practice of spreading septic
waste in open fields or pits could halt. Runoff and seepage of
pathogenic biological agents from septic tank waste can contaminate
ground water, surface water, rivers and streams. Septic tank waste
pumped and sent to processing stations using a Septage Bioreactor would
be converted to a usable fuel, not supposedly filtered out in the
ground.

--- Extend landfill life. Landfills take
up considerable acreage and fill up quickly with bulk garbage and
trash. Converting that garbage quickly into fuel with the help of
septage would eliminate bulk considerably. The less bulk, the longer
the landfill will take to fill up.